The Hollow Men (band)

The Hollow Men were a British indie band from Leeds, England. The group named itself after the poem by T. S. Eliot. The members were David Ashmoore on vocals, Choque on guitar, Howard Taylor on bass, Brian E Roberts on guitar and Jonny Cragg on drums. Between 1985 and 1994 The Hollow Men released four albums and several singles.

Starting out as a two piece for the first single "Late Flowering Lust", David Ashmoore and Choque (who was previously in Leeds band Salvation) and session bassist John Dean were joined by permanent bassist Howard Taylor for debut album Tales Of The Riverbank released on their own Evensong record label.
The trio recorded another album The Man Who Would Be King again on Evensong before drummer Jonny Cragg, who had guested on the album and guitarist Brian E Roberts, a former band mate of Taylor's when they were in The Passmore Sisters together, joined.

They signed to Arista Records in 1988 and released their debut single, "White Train", which was a remixed version of the song that originally appeared on the The Man Who Would Be King album. In December 1989, the British music magazine, NME reported that The Hollow Men, along with others such as Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine and The Charlatans, were their pick as 'stars of tomorrow'.[1] The only album the band recorded for Arista was Cresta released in 1990. The band split up in 1991.

The album Twisted made up from unreleased, demo and live tracks was released in the US only on November Records in 1994.

Discography

Albums

Year Title Record label Chart positions
UK Albums Chart U.S. Pop Albums Chart
1986 Tales Of The Riverbank Dead Man's Curve
1988 The Man Who Would Be King Dead Man's Curve
1990 Cresta BMG
1994 Twisted November Records

EPs and singles

Year Title Record label Chart positions
UK Singles Chart US Modern Rock
1985 "Late Flowering Lust" Evensong
1989 "The Drowning Man" Blind Eye Records
"White Train" BMG, Evensong
1990 "The Moon's a Balloon" Creation
1991 "Live EP" Arista
"November Comes" BMG, Evensong, Arista #16
"Pink Panther" Evensong
"Pink Panther" Evensong

References

  1. ↑ Tobler, John (1992). NME Rock 'N' Roll Years (1st ed.). London: Reed International Books Ltd. p. 463. CN 5585.

External links

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